Company driver late fee for following delivery time issued?

Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by KerSplat, Jul 11, 2024.

  1. AHayes90

    AHayes90 Bobtail Member

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    In short, Yes. Any company or more accurately, person, will throw you under the bus rather than taking responsibility for their mistakes. Don't let people "tell" you anything unless it's in an email. Email = Receipt. If they don't send you one or if the conversation happens organically, YOU then are responsible for covering your own ###. Don't "believe" or "expect" people to have integrity simply because you do. Keep and create receipts via email.
     
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  3. KerSplat

    KerSplat Bobtail Member

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    They’re withholding everything for California not Wisconsin and they aren’t paying me on duty time either and as a California resident for on duty time I thought I was supposed to be getting a minimum wage payment for that. I don’t know. I feel like this company is being shady as hell.
     
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  4. Moosetek13

    Moosetek13 Road Train Member

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    Wow. Changing the delivery time after the fact is a big no-go for me.
    When I agree to accept the load, those are the times and it is set in stone. That is the contract I agreed to.
    If they change the conditions of the contract after the fact, then I also have the right to refuse without penalty.
     
  5. KerSplat

    KerSplat Bobtail Member

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    I never thought of it like that. It does sound nice, but I don’t know how well that would fly as a company driver.
     
  6. kylefitzy

    kylefitzy Road Train Member

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    They probably booked the load with a delivery date, delivery time tbd.
     
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  7. tscottme

    tscottme Road Train Member

    Having a CA CDL is going to limit the number of companies you can work for outside of CA. With CA making EVERYTHING difficult for any employer you may want to think about working the rest of your career in CA or leaving and never seeing it again. If you leave CA, never tell anyone I suggested it. I can't accept that responsibility. My state is filling up with Californians. I'm pushing for my state to deport all of them to ANYWHERE else. The so-called good ones from CA are just the ones that refuse to accept how bad CA really is before jumping in the lifeboat and leaving that sinking ship. Before telling your employer about CA employment law, have a back-up job in your pocket. They will easily dump you before they live by CA rules. That's what I would do if I was a non-CA based employer.
     
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  8. Moosetek13

    Moosetek13 Road Train Member

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    I am a company driver.

    When I started here I was told that when I accepted a load it was the same as signing a contract, and both parties have to hold up their end of that contract.
    That made a lot of sense to me. They make an offer, and if I agree to the terms we have an agreement - a contract.

    If the conditions change then the contract needs to be renegotiated.

    Something similar happened last week.
    I accepted a Costco load and was dispatched on it.
    Usually there is a trailer number in the load assignment, but this one didn't have it.
    Before I got to the shipper I called my DM to get the trailer number. It finally came, and it was an intermodal trailer.
    Well, I do not do intermodal. So I said I would not do that load and they needed to find me something else.

    In short order that load was voided. The reason being that intermodal was not stated by the shipper.
     
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  9. Moosetek13

    Moosetek13 Road Train Member

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    Burnsville, MN
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    If it didn't have a set date and time my pplan would state 'No Delivery Appointment'.
    If it gives a date and time window, then that is what I expect to be an accurate time or time window that I can plan with.
     
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  10. bad-luck

    bad-luck Road Train Member

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    I have never heard of a $1055 late fee. Usually the driver that get stuck with something like this, are 1099. I personally would find another job.
     
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  11. Siinman

    Siinman Road Train Member

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    CA laws do not apply to companies outside of CA. They are not doing anything wrong on that part. I would send all information to the top manager or Owner in an email. Document everything and if they take money from you be prepared to find another job and get an attorney.
     
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